Macworld reports that macOS Tahoe introduces three key security features: Terminal paste protection warnings, Background ...
If you keep a lot of valuable information on your Mac, encrypting it will help you keep the data safe. Apple’s built-in FileVault disk encryption on macOS is an effective way to do this. But what ...
Apple already has many, many protections to help combat attacks like these; now, we’ll see warnings in macOS Tahoe 26.4 ...
Apple also continued its annual tradition of introducing new privacy and security features in its latest operating systems, designed to keep you and your data safer than ever. Here are three of my ...
Apple’s first pass at built-in encryption was, frankly, terrible. The original FileVault, introduced with 10.3 Panther in 2003, only encrypted a user’s home directory, and had a number of functional ...
FileVault is an additional security feature included with MacOS that encrypts all the files contained within your system. By using the disk encryption component, all the information sitting on your ...
Last week I wrote a few tips about disk encryption, but I didn’t write about what to do with the startup disk on your Mac. I cannot think of any reason you shouldn’t encrypt your startup disk after ...
If you have a modern Mac, there’s almost no reason not to use FileVault, the all-disk encryption that’s built in to OS X. It doesn’t slow the computer down, it keeps your data safe and – if the ...